idea behind that is that, if this interview was shown in court, it gives a clear picture of you. the other is a global view of the room. everyone who is in the room is shown in the picture. that s about showing exactly what happened. and, this was key. no more lying! in america it s legal for cops to lie to suspects. not here. could you, for example, go into this interview and say, i have a certain specific piece of evidence that tells me you are guilty, if you don t have that evidence? no. absolutely not. can you talk to a suspect for as long as you want to? no. you should only interview for two hours at a time and should take recognized breaks at mealtimes. prayer times and nighttime. someone a little challenged, like robert. they re entitled under the law to what s called an appropriate adult. it might be a parent. might be a social worker, but they are entitled to that as well as their legal representative. but when the interrogation rules were changed, many veteran
shot of the interviewee, and the idea behind that is that, if this interview was shown in court, it gives a clear picture of you. the other is a global view of the room. everyone who is in the room is shown in the picture. that s about showing exactly what happened. and, this was key. no more lying! in america it s legal for cops to lie to suspects. not here. could you, for example, go into this interview and say, i have a certain specific piece of evidence that tells me you are guilty, if you don t have that evidence? no. absolutely not. can you talk to a suspect for as long as you want to? no. you should only interview for two hours at a time and should take recognized breaks at mealtimes. prayer times and nighttime. someone a little challenged, like robert. they re entitled under the law to what s called an appropriate adult. it might be a parent. might be a social worker, but they are entitled to that as well as their legal
after four and a half years of civil war, nearly half of syria s population has been displaced and russia s air strikes since september 30th are only making it harder for those who remain. joining me now is gale ahman, senior fellow at the council on foreign relations who just returned from the syrian-turkish border where she saw the struggles faced by refugees firsthand. thank you very much. good to see you safely back in new york. tell me your take-aways from your reporting trip to the border. you know, the gap between the conversation in washington and the reality on the ground for people who are seeking safety could not be bigger. you have people in washington talking about ticking time bombs or keeping syrians out and when you are on the ground, what you meet are moms who are stretching mealtimes to two a day so that they can feed their kids, moms who are fleeing barrel bombs, who have seen their children thrown from balconies on to the ground below and are really just trying to
the day when we were raised our moms and parents spent less time with us and i guess we kind of turned out okay. doing all right. doing all right. yeah. what s the thing for you that is a must not miss? is it mealtime is. mealtimes, you know bath time. night night time. that is kind of putting them to bed kind of puts me at ease kind of, too, but it s tough, you know you want to see what s going on and not missing a big story in the next day. every household, it s always a struggle regardless. yeah, well i mean you want to be able to do it all and do it all well. but those habits of dinner bath bedtime, those are the three that you like a little you can t necessarily have it all at once. you can have it all. maybe a little bit here and there. maybe not all at once. it s okay. kind of give yourself a break. that s right. you have to be compassionate to yourself, right? really cool. thank you so much. that s going to wrap things up for us today. i ll she you back here t
care. this is the main dining room. we do not have mealtimes. the residents want to choose when they get up, when they are going to go to bed, when they want to eat. this is just a tv room, a little library. the residents bring all of their own furniture. they put all their memories on the wall. they make it very home-like. we provide all the care that they need inside this apartment. we have 90 beds in this facility. we have three different units. we have a 24-bed dementia unit, a 28-bed rehab. and then we have long-term care services. this is one of the 20 rooms on this unit. each room has a private restroom. the rooms are very spacious. we do person-centered care here. it s getting away from the medical model, basically. we also have a private dining